Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 30, 1919, Page 1

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VOL. STEEL STRIK ASPECT OF A DEADLOCK The Chief Struggle Now Centers In the Mills of the Bethlchem Steel Company, Whose 40,000 Employes Have Been Commanded By Union Leaders to Join the Strikers— President Grace Maintains That All the Plants Are Prac- tically In Full Operation—Secretary Foster of the Strik- ers’ Committee Contends That Schwab’s Big Plant Is Completely Crippled. i Sbay Germany Must Recall Troops in Russia Paris, Sept. 20.—The text of the note sent by the Jalied- powers to the Ger- man pvcmmnfirnmx the cvac- uation of ' ‘the provinces was made public last evening. says the evacuation must begin imme- diately and continue uninterruptedly. SOFT COAL MINERS AND OPERATORS ARE AT ODDS Buffalo. N. Y. Sept. 29.—The = soft coal operators and miners of the cen- tral competitive field clashed at to- day’s wage conference on the issues of whether the war time agreement of Aprig (016, is still in force, and the er#:ut Of authority vested in the min- ers' dclegates to negotiate a new scale. The debate during a = four hours’ session was at times heated but there was no indication of a break in the negotiations and when adjourn- Guns Rule Omaha Omaha, Neb., Sept. troops from Forts Omaha and Crook, Neb., and Camp Dodge, lowa, on riot duty’ and with 500 more soldlers duc 1o arrive later tonight Omaha officials Were confident there would be no fui- ther outbreak of the race rioting which yesterday and last night sulted in the death of two persons, in- juries to several score others, an tempt to lynch Mayor E. P. Smith, anad partial desfruction by fire orf the County court house. 'NORWICH, CONN. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1919 10 PAGES—74 COLUMNS PRICE TWO CENTS President Wilson in Semi-Seclusion Will Not For the Present Be Permitted to See Any of the Senate Leaders. ‘Washington, Sept. 29 absolute prohibition against work or worr§, President Wilson began today the vacation which has been prescrib- ed as the cure for his attack of nerv- ous exhaustion. After another troubled night he slept from early morning until to- ward nocn, and in the afternoon was taken ‘for an hour's automobile ride. The remainder of the day he spent quietly secluded in his room or talking with members of his family, Under an Condensed Telegrams Manufacturers used 10,000,000 pounds less wool in August than in July of this year. Standard Oil Co. of Loujsiana bought a 20,0000-barrel a day well in Clairborn Parish. An earthquake was reported at Fort de France, West Indies. No damage 1 was done. Shipping Board will build for Department 12 -transports of tons each. War 7,5000 Serbia, according to thé Petit Pari- sien, is now ready to sign the Austrian peace treaty. British evacuation of Archangel wi completed with the exception of 200 Highlanders. Officials at Fort Sheridan announced one thousand trocps will be on reserve !T i BE NO SPECIAL SESSION OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBL Governor Holcomb In So Deciding Declares There Is a Sharp Divisicn In Sentimient On the Question of Woman Suf- frage and That It Should Be Decided By a Vote of the People of the State—Calls Attention to the Fact that the Present Members of ths Legislature Are On Record as Opposed to Woman Suffrage—Paints Out That Neither the Republican Nor the Democratic Party Has Advocated ment was taken it was with an agree- ment to meet again tomorrow. ceults of the sreat offensive and |sorts of methods have been resorted The troops have machine guns ready [ his atiention being kept sceupulously onc thousand ¢ Its Adoption Except By the People of the State. inier-ofensive scheduled to usher In |fo in an effort to deceive our men| The issucs were raised in the first|to put ino use'if necessary. Coe B WO S S B R e 3 fd week of the steel strike. by |'and weaken their morale. Mechanics_at! response of the of ors to the -| Headaquarters were established at . ; riford, Conn., Sept. 20.--In refus- {state. This would have been possible cans of which both capital and Tabox | Breckenridgé are. balng - oftered 335 | mands or the milers o & sixty i:r Cantral Tnalise” Mearion- by Sl 3. . So thorough will be the effort to| Gold amounting to £1,500000 sN(B%|Ing to call a special session of the leg- |If the amendment to our cons rro 4 o break the deadlock developed | day {o return to work and laborers |cent. increase in wages and shorter|Morrrs, 20th Infantry, commander of [Prevent him from doing any —wori| ™ [ \CRT 1o SoYnG o IRIatira F6 ner Haon of eonuides: tealTelating the had been pas ks he first few days, last night re- (are being given $1 per hour. But|hours and came before the joint cop- | military forces in the city. Members [that he will not be permitted, for the 3 el A sranting suffrase | €€neral assembly of 1919 defe t ned in doubt still our men hold aloof. With a few |ference in a statement - signed 'by|of the police department were put|Present, to see any of the senace| ; Ot P 1o o G Tae e (RLAnLING | SUTLAEE |iorrendiment. (Now the. neareet | he Pittsbutgh and Chicago sec- |'smoke makers’ the corporations are|Thcmas T. Brewster, executive chair- |under Col. Morris’ orders. General | leaders in charge of the fight for rai-| Germans arriving at Goblenz from ) (© Boinen. Governor Mareus H. 4ol 00ch (o expression of Sentime ihe stratezic points on the in-|making a pretense at operating. man of the: operafors. . The statement |Leonard A. Wood, commander ot tne|ification of the peace treaty. White]the nteriorveport that a Boleehvik up- {700 fomght issued this formal state- | he" people upon the question s o o ot Sdes. mage deter- Men to Stand Together. characterized the miners' demands as| central department of the army; Is ox- | House officials | believe it ‘cssential | rising is duc in Germany shortls: fL codiine Banpelateq; Erces: ; [be a vote of a general assembly whon mined efforts to push forward, one| .. = nd | ‘radicaily eXtravagant- and manifestly | pected to arrive in the city tonight} - 5 i . = - A o tcalll Aliasota s- | members were elected knowing h the hope of resuming full opera- | -Tie men are determined 1o StAAS iy ossible-of acceptance.” The operas |or tomorrow 1o take charge of the sit- |SUch a large place in the president’s| Knights of Columbus announced|on applications to call a special ses. | OB WO witeted, imowing | th ne other of crippling more plants. { joBether until they hase bt their |tors also maintained that the miners'|uation. T, ibos puss entjuely S siffec LN N I e D e b ool Assembly. BoVeRA! | ougs Wien its present mémbers. & The chief struggle, however. was |Sc ts' bonds. ‘They”will inever re-|delegates came' to the present confer-| Developments in the situation dur- | The visit of King Albert and Queen | 39,312 soldiers were placed in positions. | Feasons Were wrged One was (o et coieq i k waged for control in the mills of the | ture 15 werk wnder the old system un-|ence with their hands tied by instruc- |ing the day included izabeth of Belgium to the = ek el H e to BT TRTt ese ni e wore onsiAan aerhet | #A ‘further reason, urged was . th hiehem Steel company, whose 40 |icss their demands are me: or they(tions frem ihg United Mine' Workers | Announcement by County Actorney|JONSe 8158 Wil Be, Poscponed: U Was| o Coion™ 65 060,000 of the §100,000.000 |last session. Our constitution pro- | Weman suffrage wak sure 1o come ®0 employes had been commanded by o s levela: contention an wit] “a|A. V. Shotwell that he would do ev- . 2 - o, s 2 4 bt 1865 the o e o the vote of other states w s ion leaders 1o Join the ranke of the "3t \)ster asserted that he had re- [strike ‘threat as thelr impelling argu- | erytning in his Dower to Hx the re-|of Mr Wilsonw's condition insiead of|voted for European reliet by Congress. | viges that "The seneral assembly shall| {10, hie *suate “might take: and ° ers. ‘ment.’ i it - 3 3- 14 ¢ o vould be wise to with the majority o rival headquarters Gealing with the | Iior the snte down was . compiete|ihe United Mine Workers, replied to| lssuance of 4 proclemation by Lieur.|9USen will first make their tour of the|cane and tidal wave that swept the|following it organization” 1f a spe-| 1 1" 15 FORELmes cxprosted et In Bethlehem objective. . “We understand that a furnace was|the operators’ statement. He protested | Col. Jacob W. S. Wuest, command- | S°HRITY. + 1 620, matiocs consideced ot the resulnr|claimed that this creates the ‘specia he emploves reported to work this Lyiown' in at the Edgar Thompson |a§inst & summary sweeping aside of | ing officer at JFort OmaRa, promisins |, It Was said at the White House that| 620 Session 1t would be possible. to . have | emersency’ mentioned in our constitu in such numbers as to Pro- | worke at Braddock last night but an- | the detailed demands of the operators | protection to all and asking that fire|LNeSe precautions only were a part o g - 3 fon ) gL I o ! tion- which authorizes the governor —E. G. Grace, i of i - |by one on their ‘merits, followi: y a ies. . T e s Ll o % hr i 3 e on_urge A Schwab's biz plant at|“From Homestead has come one_of [ He declared that the miners’ delegates | near the . hospitals where Mayor |hange in his condition. The presi-|weck. urged was to'permit the present Mol | in~ national convention . assemble 2 completely crippled’ — fihe most cncouraging reports” Mr.|had full authority to negotiate a mew | Smith lies sufiering from injurics re- | 9ents pPhvsiclan has made no qualifi-| 5, ;g the week 326 influsnza cases | the® fedcra) Sufirige amendment: and | adopted platforms favoring woma am Z. Foster, secretary of the |poster said. “The men are solid and | wage scale and that whatever action|ceived when a mob attempted (o were reported throughout the country, |in aid of this -petitions were present- | Suffrage. This is true but neither o day in which he said the illness was not alarming but that a considerablc period of rest would be necessary for recovery. them advocated its adoption except by vote of the people of the state; the national republican platform favor they took here would be endorsed by the adjou; convention of the Unit- ed Mine Workers when it meets at In- Iynch him. Announcemént by condition was “ver an increase of 51 over week. the previous kers' national committee. Elsewhere results of the dav's eco- romic battle were equally obseured by many additions haye been made to their ranks. “We are in the dark as to the Du- od signed by a considerable majority of each branch of the general assem- bly, a few requesting the calling of a Mayor Smith’s satisfactory.” ns claims. The independent |quespe situation. I have had no re-|dianapolis. Inauguration by local authorities of 2L s Bl thovsand new’ membi R iew. regte) e 80" &|the cxtension of suffrage to wome: tsbu; s “50 per cent. out of ac- | “All plants with the exce; a - | transportation of negro prisoners in - Bt et = : oubttul if |to settle the question for itself’; an 1ion." according to Foster, but accord- |the Jones and Laughlin and Shoen-|proved by the government, Mr: Lewis| outbreak of tne trouble, including the |13 interfered with the presidents | New York County in the two weeks'|suffrage amendment. 1t 18 doubiu’ W1 " fonal democratic platform fa i o commany officials it is little |perger are compietely down in the|maintained. was for the period of the|jalls here to the Stais beuicatisy | uen & conmion whE ey somee 5 have roquested the calling of a special | vored it with this provision ‘we rec- afiected. The Carnegie Steel company | city of Pittsburgh. Both of these are|war and that it could not be justly at Lincoln. e b e et et | Aasonding kol a tenart . ressived byl e A Spoeaned that a ma-|ommend the extension ‘of the .fram BEe i e e Suell Y [sudty. trippiet gaimed that the counfry was ol at| .The ety was quiet throughout the(ghil’ uDon his system. . Mr. Wilson i3] the Ukranian National Committee at|jority of the present members of the |chise to the women of the country b 2 salient_cl en were re- - . 3 ay, soldiers patrolling the sireets to d St e odaithead V7 - I _ e S osed to wo- | the states upon the same terms as t ists her: of the United PORT TO WORK | Ion 3 - | corners of groups o persons. e = . i o suftrage| “I am of the opinion that nome of ates Steel corporatien to “stampede PLANT REl tion of peace. 4 Late today information from Ford “‘i"»;'r'i':?"é..‘n‘.’e{;‘i,“Jg"‘&.‘"&'};"y’,f;’n“°;‘,’.. The Tacglich Rundschau, of Berlin | would not b convinced that they had | the resolutions create the ‘specia From Chicazo came reports that the | New York, Sept. 29.—BEmployes of Operators’ Statement. E;slfluilwn;_ to ll;fa?flecl\}h,fl;‘ Physi-|en out at ten o'clock this morning, | was informed that permission to reside | had “their day in court” when a ma-|emergency’ -’-rwyu»u‘qul I e o struggle for control in that ce the Bethlehem Steel Company re-} After referring to the existing wage e g tyor = Smith have| constituted the only official news dur- | in Dessau was denied General van [ jority of the members of the court had | tution which is the onlyl authe - g 4 Tolin that center was | % ed to work today in such num- [agreement to which the ' government |Slight fear of complications setting in.|inz the day regarding the president's| Below by the mayor. g ced In advance wiat the de-|giyen the governor to call a specia being caually stubbornly ~contested, | POrted tQ VN O ually full ope-|was a party and maintaining that it| MAYor Smith was the victim severai| conaition. Tt was as followa: 3 =— o —onld he against tnem. s I therefore decline to ca TRt gapparent material gains for | DSBS 10 P plants, declared E. G.|is still in effect and reciting the de-|YSaTS ago of an accident\which re-| “Urpe®T ociaant passed a restless| Reports at Washington announce |’ “There it sharm division in senti- 3 ot The Weirton Steel company sus- | Grace, president of the- company, to|mands of the miners presented at the|3uited o serious operafion on the|night, but is sleeping this morning.” | British and French lace manufacturers|ment in this state on the question of | A pended operations at ite plant i |nbt B presented at the present conference, |SKull He wears o silver plate where are preparing to form an alliance to|wyman suffrage which should be de-| oo 000G L Mr. Grace made public his letter <o | the operators’ statement said YALE MAN LEADING STUDENT | Promote mutual interest. Cided by a vote of the people of the larksburs, W. moved at that time. Va. posting notices During the at- thy 11 ® | William Z Foster, secretayy of the ‘ou demand a 60 per cent. increase - € ing 3 ieis for memaineipre slosed indefl- | T tional committee for OrgARIZINE |in wage scale Ry e el fempt o place his life in Jjeopardy AT HARVARD LAW SCHOOL| General Carlos, ome of the supporters characterized by labor lead: 2% |iron ‘ang steel workers, in which hé|overtime and doubie time for legal[$unday the mavor received a severe — of Membrenos claim to the presidency | HARTFORD MEN FINED FOR POSSE ON HUNT FOR A ockout. g aders 23 @324 refused to confer with strike|holidays and Sumdays. Acceptance of [ PIOW on the head from the cffects of| Cambridge. Mass. Sept. 29.—A Yale|of Honduras, is threatening the capital ROHIBITION LAW NEGRO IN NEW JERSEY The threatened “invasion” of TWest |16aders. as requested by Mr. FOSter. |these demands, with the indirect in- i on Ie; danger of complications | man was pronounced the leading stu-|with a force of 900 men. VIOLATING P Virginia by Ohio strikers (o enfomte s In tiie letter. Mr.' Grage smpha-|creases inherent fo .other items of w-gn o f hi g B R SR Tibaol today e s S 29 fter a hearing | ~Merchantville, N, J., Sept. walkout in th t TCe 2 | izes the atttude of the Bethlehem |your demands, would more than dou- eount ol Dis gbrevious dis-{when the Fay diploma was awarded| The First Baptist church of Winsted | Hartford, Sept 29 —4 % in|Headed by Sheriff Lippincott of Bur- ut in the Weirton mils did not ability the mavor had'for @-long time Archi i e United States district court in et develop. Ohio guardsmen held mébil. |€OMPany in having arranged. some |ble the already high Y o 0 Archibald MacTiaish, of Glepcoe.!has extended a call to ReRv, Dr. H. N. | in: the Unit iz dge Gar lington county, a posse of more than oD, Ohie suarisei haid ey, 157 o 4y o oF Prioves| oral ite COREoRing Intak Hiivact and fin?mai from violent exercise of all| Ils. a_graduate of Yale in the class|Thompson, pastor of the Memoriaj|this city teday, which Judge Sarein | ed Armed men. tonight sur siie disturbanices wi o For 108 | representztion, under which he as-|indirect additions to_the cost of living | Kinds. = of 1915. The diploma is given an-|Baptis: ehurch in Hartford designated as an inquiry to ald thel o, 509 5 swamp near Hainesport i action. ere not called into | 27T " fie “men are recognized -and|of every citizen and a demoralization | SReriff M. L. Clark. who had charge | nually fo the member of the graduat- BiEEE coufis Conslence. in imposing sen-jrounded a swamp near Haineepert U e given every opportunity to copfer|ang prostration of the industry. Such | of about 100 prisoners st the county| ing class of the law school who in the| Germany is reported as having a bill | tence, the judge imposed a fine of i i o0i" s have made a brutal atta NO BRE, with the management. - wage increases are impossible and!Ja of an ubper floor of the courthouse | three years' course ranks highest inpefore the National Assembly D rovid. | $250 on Barney Haydasz and $100 on | f82C U0 M "N FXotsey AK IN THE RANKS “The plan provides for the election | their attempted enforgement would re-j bullding, tonight told of how he at-| scholtrship, conduct and character|ing’for construction of & million tons | Stanley Chikla, saloonkeepers, both | [0 Shyie s or violence we OF THE STEEL STRIKERS |by emploves of representatives (rom |nc; with great Marmd equally on the | tempied to prevent members of the | nd Eives evidenc cof the &reatest | op® porchoms macuom o e of this city, for violation of the war-|{oWR. Threats of violence werd Pite = among their .number to deal with the|nation and on the individual miners :-ob which forced its way into the | promise. e 8 E: time prohibition law. The men had]b¥ SOMme members of th0 Pocee: e 1o in ipitburgh. Pa. Sent 28 —A break | management on the settlement of ail|you represent. building from getting possession of The board of overseers of Harvard| Frank L. Dowling, president of the|Pleaded guyty to an indictment DUty . iect the fugitive should he be Ui manks of the stec] strikers, pre- | differences.” said Mr. Grace tonight.|’You demand a change from the|Brown. college with 24 of its 32 members pres- | Borough of Manhatian,. died at his|feredal Investigator Edward I Hick® | caught and that “law and order must dicted by some of the corporations,|-in no case have the employes re- | long-established —custom. of having hen the heat from the burning| ent, re-elected Judge -Robert Grant |pono 'S5 O, FRAnAlan fled At bl jey pelieved sales had been made by | EUEL ST 3 Jas mot in evidence today. according|quested the abolition of the system.|wage agreements expire in the spring, |DUilding became intense the prisoners | as president. Acting with the presi-| 5000 cireer. Now York, o - €5t | the men since their arrest on on Au-| "y, (s ement tonight Mayor Ren- o reports received from different|nor has there been a strke vote taken | when there i€ least danger and Incon- | Were taken to the roof for safety.| dent and Fellows of the college, the| - 2 5 gust 25, and for that reason United( (% 2 statement tonieght Havor o8- :‘u{r.s. No claims were made byln the plant of the compary. venience to the public. to an expira-| WhHe on the top of the building the | board conferred the degree of bachelor| A mixed German and Entente com- | States District Attorney John F. (ros- ny crucltf. “Let me emphasize,” sieel companies of Jarge defections| Mr. Grace in his letter to Mr. Foster | yion November 1. which is the time of | SFOWdS in the streets ' below were [ of laws upon 70 men who finished the | mission will go to the Baltic to aid in|by had witnesses present for the said, “that %there will be no lynch- “mong the strikers. but a number of |added: maximum demand for coal. You de- | SROUUNE for the negro. Other megro|law school course in the special ses-|the direct evacuation of German|court to‘interrogate and these testi- It the prisoner, when caught, at- ihem. including the Carncgic Steel|““Inasmuch as vou have not waited |mind other jtems. none of which have | ELSORETs attempted ‘to throw Brown | sion arransed for men who obtained | troops from that region. fied to the fact. tempts to escape, however, he will be \mpany and the American Sicel and [uncil the time you set for an-amswer,| SLUL 0 Constractive merlt. but all of | (T the building. but were overpower- | their discharge from the service and e vdasz is the manager of a saloon | ;i g, O o8 ot N SnelTpany. did insist that men|for instance, 4 p. m. Thursday, Sep-|%’Losiible to reach a prompt and de- | £, 2nd Prevented from doing so by | studied through the summer. Five men| England’s war supply of radium ig|and Chikla was a bartender (nere e s in FateaEaaE ol tho. Sadts ures were given " 0 Work. No fig- |tember 25th. but have already placed | finite conclusion and to preserve _the | 'f Sheriff and his deputies. won their degree with honors being turned over to the British doc-| In passing sentence Judge ( [has been identified as a farmhand em Leaders at strike head: in the hands of our men at Bethlehem | principles of collective bargaining. B Sy A indicate, was the tors and surgeons o that they may ex- | said the accused must understand|ploved on a farm near Green Tree. He e LT auarters ex-la circular requesting the men 1o quit|which tend to increase cost and de- |00/°3 man of all the prisoners. He | RAINBOW DIVISION MEN periment on a large scale. that the law they had pleaded EUIlLY |flad to the swamp when the local police aimed 1o e onoion At what they|work, Monday. September 29th. in alllcrease produciion. We must also dis- | peag;,nOthing to sav. He seemead to to breaking was not a law to be light-} tried to apprehend him. All the roads ST S fhe faiure of the United |of our steel plants. perhaps your| il hese mpints as undesirabi realize, Sheriff Clark said, that every CHARGED WITH MUTINY| A, inti-strike law was passed by the |1y regarded and must be obeved byall|and bridges in the vicinity were guard- ] he organbed e 5t —r :I“f:‘vguf communication does not call for a re- The operators have sent their ac- |G ".e';m;gr;g"“;‘l‘:::::lelh:)ng‘;umed over] | i Sep_l 29 —Eighteen mem- | Alabama Legislature. A fine of $1,000 law-abiding (lEizons.‘ He ”;’,,.!‘:‘ re-|ed tonight by farmers —armed with watkout was started a week ago. It ANNEXATION OF FIUME |Te8ret to find that the miners' coiven:|was just jammed with rioters, S erm | in_the ~ Rainbow ' Division, were| Rumanian Government is consider- | Conno ticut was in favor Of IST®"INO STATEMENT BY BOSTON was insisted the men have real sriev- = o R e o ot Clxge iaw. » Sherif) brought here today as pisoners on|ing national R PRI Betoleun e e (O plced) Staton 19 CENTRAL LABOR UN{ON Rues that they cannot be readily Paris, Sept. 20.—Attention was call- -t . rhsliegs ower| For an instant, =2 the Quebec liner Charybdis from Ham- R S eam SR neiees S e riven buck to work. ed here this motning to the fact that|and e iy L o _authorlilon Whe' stairway. g anding | ilton. Bermuda. and were arraigned | Will monopolize the fields of that coun: | MISSING BOSTON 3IRL Boston, Sept —The sub-commit- National headquarters met company | the majority for the Ttalian govern- ntr_bplihren Iy ‘uén' ed 2 :g D Eor; back -turned to the prisoners om the | Pefore United States Commissioner | Y- FOUND IN NEW HAVEN | (ce of the committee of seventeen of Stecl was not seriously aficcted b N | in ‘the Italian chamber was small—| (07t 804 (0 NECcoRient SOCE CORC| Brown was pushed by nesro nrisoners | Charged that the prisoners refused to| In a “f"!g‘_’“ made _public in - 3 New- Haven, Conn., Sept. 29.-Miss) resenting orzanized labor in the police ke with a telegram from the « 120 when the ten absentions and ic O LT ctions 101 Past the sheriff into the hands of ihg| continue the vovage on the Katonah|Louis. President Wilson praised David | Muriel Young, 16-year-ol 3ostcm | strike situation met with the officers n r on the ground at Bethle-| ahout thirty .members of the govern- ;:il R he aitetnetive of]mioB. 7 | after the latter hay put into Hamil-|I" Francis, 'Ambassador to Russia for|girl, who had been missing from her|of the policemen’s union today. b - itinz that Charles M.| ment who voted for the*cabinet are : v’ 4 ds in foll r 2 ton to right her cargo, asserting that|his dealing with an almost impossible | home since Sept. 14, has been located | when adjournment was taken an- = s biz vlant “Was completelyfeaken into comsideration. The morn- | STAnting your demands in_ full or o the ship was leaky. Each of the pris- | Situation. in a rooming house here, and taken|nounced there was no statement to rippled.” Union leaders claim that{ing papers raise the question, In view|Fcauesting vou to go back for amlflhf’l'~ PROTEST AGAINST THE oners was held in $1,000 bail. back to Boston by her mother, Mrs.|make. Present aft the meeting was cthiehem Steel is 75 per cent. organ-i of the umertainty which this result ;:s lq!:e{:umc“wllh us in conform- LYNCHING OF A NEGRO | The Katonah sailed from Newport| Coney Island was seriously threat-|Arthur P. Igglesion, and her aunt|\rs. Glendower Evans of Broo e shows, whether Ifaly can declare the| !ty With the call. — News last August laden with lumber,|ened with another big fire when flames | Mrs. Cora Eggleston. Miss Young. | who was prominent in the Lawrer Fighting te Close Bi~ Plant. annexation of Fiume without break- To Insist Ubon Reasonableness. Boston, Sept. 29.—A telegram pro- | bound for South American ports. After |destroyed the Sea Beach Palace on|it is said, came here on Sept. 1 ind | Jabor troubles last spring as a e fght Cf tha usion o ' ske] Mg WK i dmtante. ‘The overaters hold that no abro- | teSUNE against the lynching of a negro | the members of the crew refused to|Surf avenue and partly burned the|on last Friday went to the office of I.|pathizer with the strikers. wn e bi BAMAPURNERE Sine’ of ThE The press calls attention to the fact|zation of the existing contract can be|2Nd the attack upon Mayor at' Omaha | resume their duties they were locked [ Thompson Scenic Railway. G. Richey, a friend of her parents, and President John F. McInnis of the e @ Laughiin Company in this| that Foreign. Minister Tittoni studi-|had prior to its legal termination. ex- I’;""”'d“! was sent by the National | up at Hamilton until the arrival of inquired for him, He s not in his of- | policemen’s union addressed a meeting . iiing waged vizorously. This|ously avoided any definite expression|éept by the mutual agreement of all|Haual Rights league today to Senator | the Charyhdis. Michael Rodzianko, a former presi- | fice, but when he returned the descrip-| o fseveral hundred shopmen of the 4 {hstood the aseaults of the| regarding the present attitide of parties thereto, the overators. the|Nelson and Representative Volstead, dent of the Russian Duma, issued an |tion given him of the girl caused him|New York, New Haven and Hartford Week with better success,| President Wilson and also refrained|miners and the government. We are|chairman of the judiciary commissions | y. 8. MARINES NOT SUBJECT order of the day, to , the Nortwestern [0 believe it was Miss Young and he|railroad in the Readville district to- rdinz to seports, than did the| fro mcommitting himself or the gov-|réady and willing to nesotiate » mew | Of the two branches of congress. The =~ TO BRITISH ADMIRALTY |ArMY announcing an attempt will be |notified her mother [day and explained “the truth of tHE h =ic Compvany. but the striking|ernment directiy concerning d'Annun-|contract to’ succeed at its legal expir-|l¢lesram urged the chairman “to IR made to capture Petrograd. Since her disappearance after she|strike.” = workers said thev are making in- | zio's’ occupation of Fiume. atlon of the contract now in effect, [ initiate legislation this session to stop| . had boarded a train in Boston, the “ais now 'William % Fos-| Rome despatches relating the result|but we must insist that such negotia- | YNching under the federal law.” D e oard Cimecretary | Professor W. B. Van Callin, of the|police of many cities have been asked | goyry oy oo o T O f¢ national commitiee. today | of the mission of Admiral Cagni to|tion be entered into a spirit of reason- = is" published statements that. ihe|University of Pennsylvania, who ar-. |t0 100k for her. It was reported that B0 « plant was Afty per cent. out | Fiume also are much commented upon.|ableness and that the representatives| RADICALS ARE HURTING jous” published statements 'that . the|rived at Nome, Alaska, announced that | she had taken with her jewelry valued TREND OF RAILWAY STRIKE of action. This is vigorously combat- | particularly the statement attributed|of the miners be vested with their THE CAUS| | Daimatia. September 23, was at ihe|he had discovered a buried Eskimo|at $6,0000 which belonged to her aunt S “d by representatives of the company | to the admiral that in his opinion the|usual discretionary power to really ne- E OF LABOR| Dalmatia, Septomber 28 nos at theliillage and 80 frozen Eskimos. Jobdon. & £pt overnment of- b0 maintain tha: the works ae not|ofly soljtion s the annexation of gotiate. Only.under such conditions 18| v uiion Sepr 20— Because of] Sborstany declared hat Ameein moos PUBLICATIONUOF PEACE s Y i B o Ul . s hly L s con- : . 29— ? orning in their expressions regard- » eduy when strike headquarters| The fall of the Nitti cabinet through|more than usually mrave responsibili- | iZed labor is losing public confidence,|directly under control ‘of American|ing and several injured and others rob-| L . g .. CHavas)—A de.| Tespondent of The Associated Press (hat it had received a re- | disintegration beginning wtih the|ties resting upon them because of| Secretary Redfield said today. OIicer Wua hot dn any, avanner:'ve- [bed iu the moet daring feud #nd hold- | AT e from Sofia, Bul- s officially informed that the ma- e e s [ T ton e i e e e TS B aoate in the pro.| ; The radical action shown ir_the|SPoRSiblS to the Britlsh admiraity. ups New York has seen in years. There | SPatch to the Temps from Sofia, Bul'l chinery for the distribution of food Is S ihe hoon hour. When con- | toni, ah has been persstently predict.|cesses of post-war adiustments with [ Boston police strike and the radicall Mr. Daniels said that Rear Admiral (were three hold ups. Two men were | Saria, states that the publication of | oiiin"So wen that it e possible to war cought from compans | ed. or a dissolution of th echamber|which the nation is confronted; they|le@dership appearing in the steel [Philiv Andrews. in landing bluejackets |arrested. the peace terms provoked consternd:|announce that adequate :supplies of Cwes it was declared that!and mew elections in three weeks are|expected the miners to aporoach these | Strike,” said Mr. Redfield, “seem to|from the cruiser Olympia to take O D e Pes| food are absolutely guaranteed fo the the = lkout consisted of fifteen bovs | the alternatives considered here. important negotiations _in _the same| fie 1o threaten the loss of public con- |Possession of Trau were merels Car-| Lisut.-Col. Edwin M. Leary, 4th Cav- | and public places were closed at nine| count More than 100 trains are arnegie Cempany today gave spirit. But with your hands tied by ctive and con- ] “ X alry, and Lieut. Hollingsworth, air ser- | g'clock by order of the minister of | OPerating in th various dist and s Sy b sur instructions. and a| Servative nature of organized labor|Preme Allied Council in Paris which){; < 73 s o gl th s increasing today, some a .mer“J};Allnme:u;ere!ogm‘ MOB LYNCHED Two ;r‘.sikr:tl\;;:‘utf 3::: only impelling ar-|2nd fo causp the labor movement a|bad designated a section of the Dal- ;;sc wetel l»\:'xll:;d"t'!:ldeéleul: co;mony, the interior in sign of mourning. Thej ¢ l;\‘:m:;:';m}:fre?w\:fi ;o?:m“.: ne that ‘most of the plants are NEGROES IN ALABAMA | zument. we ask vou if there is any | serious injury. = matjan coast to be Sdministered and |irci piane in which they were NVIng | taniy is Inaceentaic but 1t scoms thay| And Other union men Who oppose the b - - ¥ i riny results b - end of organized labe i e Unite es until a i City., t A e 1 s g oty £ O o 3 3 : it ety jury to its progress through radical.|torial claims was reached. The more to take a more reasonable view| en itude is wn- ra A‘Dtl;"‘l’):qu:ef’l:‘e :.“.; Clair cifi:?&' !:s; EI:‘;l:rX_(:rd‘:énd i:loh:ol;t_ der such limitations ism.” g dical- o ce, ‘he said, had suboeribed | 0| ESSSEX POSTMASTER FOUND o_B( ]t.he actual situation it provides for g‘;;:*’if}-fl '{'r:‘c?hg"me:nzm"; ‘)‘“\3”1’ S, = - - e offici i ve ek —_— American members of the peace con- ulgaria. 5 . e Repores” rom the Carnegle amcial | dler, ware taken from county oMicile| 1o FZeiGHT TRAINS IN LAWL=sSNESS CROPS OUT i heiped frame nio Agrebmins (nat| DEAP WITH BULLET WoUND The Associated Press ey tola by an e et et the ‘company works | today and shot to death by a meb. of COLLISION NEAR DANBURY IN BRITISH RAILWAY STRIKE |19 Other mation but the United States| mosex, Conn.. Sept. 20.—The hody ot | PRINCE OF WALES not 0 he rum By & section of the e iices chowed considerable { about 25 masked men. ‘Both negroes St a9 Weecka —— . S T wnie e DRRCorul SPEOU I cnaries’ Harsington, e e of IS.RETURNING, EASTICO 0 0o TUl v @ aectiog jof $he X s were charged with having assaulted| Danbury, Conn. Sept. 29. &€ | London. Sept. 29, via Montreal—Two | Lo, In the section of the coast al-| his town, was found today in the T stated, is absolutely with the govern- ; i i white women. used by the collision of Wto extra|attemuts to wreck trai lotted to this countr: - - Vancouver, B. C. Sept. 2. — The : ly with the govern Entire Strike District Quiet. % Y S itmos. N Y. tod eck trains running be- @ N s _|basement ‘of a store adjoining the v . ment which being deluged by of The megroes were being taken to the|freight trains at Holmes, N. Y. today | tween London and Brighton by plo Admiral Andrews was today In-|;o office. There was a bullet wound | PTince of Wales, after spending eight| fers of volunt i The entic strike district was quiet| siaie prison at Wetumpka for safe| Was cleared tonight and traffic re.|ing boullers on the tracks were re- |Soucted to cable immediately full|F0% 3 neaa. Mr. arrington who was|days In Vancouver and on Vancouver| or (he country Handreds of thone ;L_.m:‘ »hg iy t‘rr c:na(::’u;l;;n ¥eeping when. the mob heid up. (He s 2}"“%" afintn-':::;,eenA,;::: c’l,:yenffln: ported today. Military forces are naw | PATiculars of the affair. 80 svansa 510 AP DA daar T filand,l left the Pacific (';m;t 10855 0N | Ende: have: g ap oD us- e made however. ! - | tomobile carrying them. ° The mob| Maybrook. . man. | guarding the line. ey day. He was last seen walking along | PI§ return journey to the east cluding large numbers of organizations e for ciolating ihe regulations of forced the county officials to surrehded | injured in the crash. was in a critical) " Strikers in Scotland have held NEW YORK BOOK AND JOB the trolley tracks - toward Saybrook | . The Arst stop to be made by “thelor giseharsed solaitis ond Eorarations the sherifs proclamation. . | their arms. led the negroes. into a|condition at the hospifal here tonight.|two trains. s OFFICES SUSPEND WORK | Coroner Davis at Middletown has been | Brince today was at New Westminster,| wore (endering their servioes ne pre sing confidence in the WMi-|wood and opencd fire on them with| Others burt were on the way to recov-| "The London and Brighton company |\ 2R | notified B. C. where he was sceheduled to open | }ale The Csoeaibiiity or s mate ouicome of the MUl Sith the| “hotsuns_and pistol ery. deny that 75 per cent. of the emgine| New York, Sept. 20.—Proprietors of | Federal post office inspectors arrived | & falr. = On his drive to New West-lof the strike to a few other nnione B e s Neiet = — : drivers and firemen of their line have | 250 union book and job offices, doing her etoday. e L b Bl is not overlooked, but no anxiety is R e ™ an with | FORECAST OF ‘RECALL OF COUNCIL’S DECISION offered to resume work. two-thirds of this class of printing | Dr. . B. Braden, medical examiner, | 414 Welcomes from residents of South| cxpicecad over this . 2 3 3 i 7. ON EASTERN GALICIA R iy ek S done in New York city, agreed tonight | rendered the opinion that Mr. Har-| \ancouver, Burnaby and other towns newspaper men this afternoon said WARTIME PROHIBITION GEN. PERSHING HONORED BY to post motices tomorrow anmouncing | rington had committed suicide. This| 3108 the_route. Ry that the sirikers would not return to| New York. Sept. 29.—Acting, it i 3o (Baves) — T e i 5 [ R T i Euiclds, = — CUNARD LINER SAXONY work unmless “they are starved back.” | eia, e 3 ing, s| _Paris, Sept. 29. ) he VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS | suspension of work until such time as [ was his second term as postmaster| GERMAN DELEGATION IS T u k. said. on one of roadway’s famous | Temps states that it has reasonm to 3 they may be able to man their presses | here, having held the office 15 years SAILED FROM TILBURY the Pittsburgh dis- trict looks better than ever and the ranks of the unmion are unbroken,” sald Mr. Foster. “The steel corpora- tions have failed in their efforts to stampede our men back to work. “The men know they have real grievances and 1 will take more than full paze mewsgaper advertisements The situation York to_get them baek “New:pape: T~ = » N, “rumors” that within a week Pres dent Wilson would cast wartime pro- hibition into the discard by proclaim- ing demobilization completed, liquor dealers “stockin gup” for a brief “wet” until next January. With hi tities of bonded whiskey arriving here from Kentucky. restaurants and sa- loons began enrolling bartenders and orovaganda amd allf waiters previously “laid oft.” % New today perios e quan- believe that the supreme council is now considering a proposal to set up in eastern Galicia a definitive regime in favor of Poland. This would take the place of the provisional regime which has been muintained since the Polish occypation of the country un- til the present. B . Square dances Jcome handy when there are not enough to go around. New York, Sept. 29.—General John J. Pershing, commander of the American expeditionary forces, today was elected honorary commander-in-chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars by the na- tional council of administration. This is the first tyme in the history of the organization. which includes only men who have seen service under the Amer- ican flag in foreign such an honor has been co: countries,. that | stereotypers. with men in good standing in the In- ternational Pressmen’s union. This closing order, it was said, de- cided upon because of the decision of certain pressmen’s unions not to arbi- trate demands for a 41 hour week and a $14 a week wage nicrease, will af- fect 5,000 pressinen and antomatically throw out of work 10.000 printers, electrotupers. photoen< gravers, and mailers. A e - 3 i ago. He leaves a wife and sister here and a brother in Hartford. ITALIAN PARLIAMENT HAS BEEN DISSOLVED Rome, Sept 29 (RBy the A. P.).— | Parliament was dissolved today. Elec STUDYING RECONSTRUCTION Paris, Sept. 29.—(Havas)—The Ger- man delegation which visited the re- gions of Arras and Lille has iz - ed that the t: Dbe very.important s sk of reconstruction will| ol that there tions will be held Nov. 16 and parlia- ‘ ment will reassemble Dec. 1. be great technical d fes o ov come. Six other 1 experts left \ersailles today to t the regions of Solssigw and Rheims London, Sept. 29.—The Cunard Lin - steamer Saxon‘a sailed from Till for New York todav, motwithstandinz the & inconveniences created hy the railroad strike. The vessel has eon | hoara 2,000 passenge: Most of them motored to London Bridge, from whers they were taken hy river sicamers downstream to Tilbury to board the Saxonia.

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